Sportal Australian Aaron Baddeley has stormed home to claim his second US PGA Tour event, the FBR Open in Scottsdale, Arizona, after firing a brilliant final round of 64 to win by one shot, catapulting him to World Number 44. A hat-trick of birdies from the Victorian from holes 15 to 17 helped him into the lead, and he held his nerves on the 72nd hole to secure the victory. Overnight leader Jeff Quinney made bogeys on each of the final two holes to surrender his advantage and slip back to third, while John Rollins, who charged up the leaderboard with a closing 63, finished second. “I just tried to hang in there and thought if I could be one behind going into the last that I d be a chance but I ended up being one in front so it was a bonus”, said Baddeley. “I hit a perfect shot on 15, probably the best second shot I ve hit all week and then a great putt on 16 went in exactly how I thought. It was just awesome.” Baddeley, coming off a 64 on day three, started the day two shots behind Quinney, and set about making up that ground with an eagle on five and a birdie on six. He still trailed by three shots rounding the turn, but a birdie on the 10th, where Quinney bogeyed, saw him close within one shot. A bogey on the 14th saw the Australian slip back three shots behind his playing partner, who birdied the same hole. But the leaderboard changed dramatically in the final four holes, with Baddeley playing superb golf, carding three birdies to take the lead on the 17th. Rollins, who had hit the flag stick on his final hole, had clubhouse lead at 20-under and was the biggest threat to Baddeley, but the 25-year-old held strong with a two-foot par putt at the last to add to the title he won at the Verizon Heritage tournament in April last year. It was a leaderboard otherwise dominated by Americans with Bart Bryant finishing fourth on 18-under, one clear of Billy Mayfair, while Heath Slocum (-16) was sixth. Fiji&aposs Vijay Singh, who signed for a final-round of 64, was seventh, while American trio Dean Wilson, Bubba Watson and David Toms shared eighth on 14-under. The next best Aussie was Peter Lonard, who grabbed a share of 14th with a final round of 69, while Steve Elkington&aposs 73 saw him finish in a tie for 44th on six-under, one clear of Nathan Green (69) and Rod Pampling (also 69). Mark Hensby, the only other Aussie to make the cut, finished 73rd after a final round of 74. The win sees Baddeley become the seventh Australian currently in the Top 50 of world golf, joining Adam Scott (3), Geoff Ogilvy (11), Nick O&aposHern (16), Stuart Appleby (21), Pampling (33) and Robert Allenby (34).